HughDP wrote:I'll give you my own speculative view... when the body dies, the brain dies too and that sense of self/personailty disappears.
That's an interesting speculation as well, but let's try to keep our speculations in the realm of realm possibilities...
Hugh wrote:Because all that's now left is our body, we can come full circle and say that there is, in fact, a continuation. Our body's constituents don't disappear when we die, they just rearrange.
I don't see that as a very comforting notion in a funeral service. Do you think that caskets are actually delaying this process, and therefore ethically wrong in that case since it delays someone's atoms being mixed in with nature? That might give strong argument for cremation and being plowed into a field of wheat so that their atoms are recycled into other people. (I don't say this factitously since some people actually do want their ashes thrown in space, the ocean, etc., for exactly this purpose.)
Hugh wrote:I think science backs up that proposition so, in answer to the original question: yes, science can tell us what happens after we die. The only fuss there has ever been about the question is because we've started off on the wrong foot with certain premises about personality, identity and self.
Certainly science can provide an account as to what happens to our atoms of our body once we cease to exist. But, I don't think that presently science can offer an account of personhood, identity, ontological realities existing after death, etc., since we lack so much information as to what the universe actually
is. I would say that your account is a speculation--just like mine--until we can answer many more scientific puzzles that beset us.
Hugh wrote:Yes, I see mathematical structures in nature. I don't find this surprising because we use mathematics to describe nature.
True, yet we could also use contradictory axioms to describe nature, but that wouldn't net the accurate predictions that mathematics described by those who had no interest in nature was able to provide. Besides, the mathematics doesn't require that physics equations (like E=mc^2, mass (photon)=hv/c^2, delta p * delta q ~ h, etc.) which describe so much of nature in so few words be so accurate in their depiction of nature. I think that strongly, and quite convincingly, suggests that nature is mathematical and not that we see it as mathematical.